Example sentences of "in at [art] [adj] [noun] [conj] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | OS/2 will get 8.5% of the total workstation market by 1996 , it says , with Unix coming in at a hefty 47% and Windows NT possibly capturing 30–40% of the office desktop/workstation market . |
2 | The sash windows were put in at a later date but the glazing bars still follow the lines of the mullions and transoms and look particularly well . |
3 | She was immediately thrown in at the deep end when one of her young clients , Lucy Gates , died . |
4 | Our housework was hard and long and laborious and erm we 'd got two children to look after and then I 'd got my brother who did n't leave home until he was thirty and er , you had n't got the time , you know , to do too many things , so er my interest was the young wives ' and it was really a as regards the erm the Guild itself , I was thrown in at the deep end when this lady who was with my mother , mother was treasurer , she was secretary , erm she used to come down for me and , I know you should n't canvass but she used to canvass and say erm you know the voting , you know , will you , will you come and vote ? |
5 | I decided the only thing to do was throw her in at the deep end and go right down the village high street , where the roads were busiest and noisiest with holiday-makers , and simply stand there trying to calm her down . |
6 | She had been thrown in at the deep end and it was a question of sink or swim . |
7 | I had never taught before but was pushed in at the deep end and had to learn to swim . |
8 | Now McFall either jumps in at the deep end or dithers and backs off — he never falls off . |
9 | They 're er they live in at the present time and er his name 's Paul and he 's the main Skoda dealer in Nottingham . |
10 | Edward came in at the french window and stared blankly at his younger sister . |
11 | I 've got it I 've got it at home I can bring it in at the next meeting or whatever . |
12 | Some writers ostensibly agree with the principle , yet sneak in at the back door and cosh the reader with a highly personal style . |
13 | While there was nothing extraordinary about the goal itself , Chapman turning the ball in at the near post after Clough had driven an indirect free-kick low through a crowd of players , the circumstances in which the kick had been given were a little odd and left Everton looking apoplectic . |
14 | Fiona , whose businessman husband Rod Potts lives in Cumbria , plans to turn in at the same time as her baby daughter Natasha . |
15 | Dealers were expected to get these cards filled in at the same time as fulfilling their quotas of business , but nobody had time . |
16 | The jolt rattled his ribs and he breathed in at the same moment as his head crashed through the surface , like a seal in the surf . |
17 | Every September we have the small ad hoc Cabinet committee known as the ‘ Star Chamber ’ [ MISC 62 ] in which Lord Whitelaw sits down and tries to bang heads together , and then the Prime Minister comes in at the last minute and bangs heads together even more . |
18 | Brilliant light dazzled in at the left-hand window as they swept past Balnaguard , Balmacneil , Kinnaird . |